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  1. Adventskalender Münchner Hausnummer – Mainzer-Straße 22
    Ich bin mir sicher, das diese emaillierte Hausnummer recht neu ist, mit einer Fraktur. Es entspricht der Münchner Hausnummer Verordnung.
    📸 @alain.k.w
    #typoadvent #citypoadvent22 #citypoadvent #weihnachtszeit #buchstabenliebe #typelove #hausnummer #housenumber #emaille #enamile #typehunter #analoguetypography #analoguetype #munichtype #munichtypefaces #minga #mingaoida #24tage24karten

  2. Adventskalender Münchner Hausnummer – Keilstraße 20 bis 4
    Dieser Wegweiser gibt die Reihenfolge von der großen zur kleinen Hausnummer an. Ein seltenes Stück in München. Emaille mit einer weißen #Fraktur. Der Schmuckrahmen und Pfeil sind fast nicht mehr vorhanden.
    📸 @alain.k.w
    #typoadvent #citypoadvent22 #citypoadvent #weihnachtszeit #buchstabenliebe #typelove #hausnummer #housenumber #emaille #enamile #typehunter #analoguetypography #analoguetype #munichtype #munichtypefaces #24tage24karten

  3. Adventskalender Münchner Hausnummer – Dienerstraße 15
    Ein Emaille Schild blau bombiert. Da wurde eine Fraktur so glattgebügelt das Sie als Groteske durchgehen würde wenn nicht das lange »S« wäre. Die bekannteste Hausnummer Münchens. Dahinter verbirgt sich das Delikatessengeschäft @dallmayrseit1700
    📸 @alain.k.w
    #typoadvent #citypoadvent22 #citypoadvent #weihnachtszeit #buchstabenliebe #typelove #hausnummer #housenumber #enamile #typehunter #munichtype #munichtypefaces #minga #mingaoida

  4. Adventskalender Münchner Hausnummer – Wiedenmayerstraße 14
    Beleuchtete Hausnummer aus Milchüberfang Glas, das blaue Glas wird mechanisch entfernt. Die Schrift wirkt ein wenig wie ein »Saloon« Beschriftung aus einem Western.
    📸 Susanne Kreklau
    #typoadvent #citypoadvent22 #citypoadvent #weihnachtszeit #buchstabenliebe #typelove #hausnummer #housenumber #emaille #enamile #typehunter #analoguetypography #analoguetype #munichtype #munichtypefaces #minga #mingaoida #24tage24karten

  5. Adventskalender Münchner Hausnummer – Mottlstraße 13
    Emaille Schild bombiert, braun mit weißer Schrift. Sehr individuelle Handschrift erinnert ein bisschen an Jugendstil. Der mini Pfeil wurde wohl nachträglich eingefügt.
    📸 twitter.com/schellingblumen (Tamara Wohlfarth)
    #typoadvent #citypoadvent22 #citypoadvent #weihnachtszeit #buchstabenliebe #typelove #hausnummer #housenumber #emaille #enamile #typehunter #analoguetype #munichtype #munichtypefaces #minga #mingaoida #24tage24karten

  6. #Kulturwandel von Innen jetzt mit @winfriedebner Sophie Rickmann und Annabel Klarwein - jetzt über #CorporateInfluencer Club (dabeisein lohnt sich!) - mit shoutout an Klaus Eck

    Beim Aufbau von Communities gilt es #Begegnungsräume zu schaffen, #Vertrauen aufbauen
    - CommunityCalls
    - Beitrag des Monats #Wertschätzung #Feedback
    - sichtbare #Vorbilder #Reputation #SharingIsCaring
    - sei da, wo die Menschen sind #Augenhöhe
    - SozialeNetzwerke sind essentiell
    - TopLevel Sponsor*innen gewinnen

  7. #Kulturwandel von Innen jetzt mit @winfriedebner Sophie Rickmann und Annabel Klarwein - jetzt über #CorporateInfluencer Club (dabeisein lohnt sich!) - mit shoutout an Klaus Eck

    Beim Aufbau von Communities gilt es #Begegnungsräume zu schaffen, #Vertrauen aufbauen
    - CommunityCalls
    - Beitrag des Monats #Wertschätzung #Feedback
    - sichtbare #Vorbilder #Reputation #SharingIsCaring
    - sei da, wo die Menschen sind #Augenhöhe
    - SozialeNetzwerke sind essentiell
    - TopLevel Sponsor*innen gewinnen

  8. #Kulturwandel von Innen jetzt mit @winfriedebner Sophie Rickmann und Annabel Klarwein - jetzt über #CorporateInfluencer Club (dabeisein lohnt sich!) - mit shoutout an Klaus Eck

    Beim Aufbau von Communities gilt es #Begegnungsräume zu schaffen, #Vertrauen aufbauen
    - CommunityCalls
    - Beitrag des Monats #Wertschätzung #Feedback
    - sichtbare #Vorbilder #Reputation #SharingIsCaring
    - sei da, wo die Menschen sind #Augenhöhe
    - SozialeNetzwerke sind essentiell
    - TopLevel Sponsor*innen gewinnen

  9. #Kulturwandel von Innen jetzt mit @winfriedebner Sophie Rickmann und Annabel Klarwein - jetzt über #CorporateInfluencer Club (dabeisein lohnt sich!) - mit shoutout an Klaus Eck

    Beim Aufbau von Communities gilt es #Begegnungsräume zu schaffen, #Vertrauen aufbauen
    - CommunityCalls
    - Beitrag des Monats #Wertschätzung #Feedback
    - sichtbare #Vorbilder #Reputation #SharingIsCaring
    - sei da, wo die Menschen sind #Augenhöhe
    - SozialeNetzwerke sind essentiell
    - TopLevel Sponsor*innen gewinnen

  10. #Kulturwandel von Innen jetzt mit @winfriedebner Sophie Rickmann und Annabel Klarwein - jetzt über #CorporateInfluencer Club (dabeisein lohnt sich!) - mit shoutout an Klaus Eck

    Beim Aufbau von Communities gilt es #Begegnungsräume zu schaffen, #Vertrauen aufbauen
    - CommunityCalls
    - Beitrag des Monats #Wertschätzung #Feedback
    - sichtbare #Vorbilder #Reputation #SharingIsCaring
    - sei da, wo die Menschen sind #Augenhöhe
    - SozialeNetzwerke sind essentiell
    - TopLevel Sponsor*innen gewinnen

  11. Need help from Lisp wizards — looks like I'm missing something simple and obvious (but not so obvious for beginner). I'm trying to build (with ECL) the simple program, which uses ql:quickload to load parse-number, then prints "Hello world". It builds without errors, but resulting binary could not be executed — it prints error message about unknown "ql:quickload" function.

    QuickLisp was installed like described in the official documentation. It works in SBCL, it works in ECL REPL and it has the necessary lines in the ~/.eclrc:

    ;;; The following lines added by ql:add-to-init-file:
    #-quicklisp
    (let ((quicklisp-init (merge-pathnames "quicklisp/setup.lisp"
    (user-homedir-pathname))))
    (when (probe-file quicklisp-init)
    (load quicklisp-init)))
    (ql:quickload '(:slite) :silent t)

    The program, itself, runs successfully if I just evaluate the next code in the REPL:

    (ql:quickload '(:parse-number) :silent t)

    (defpackage :test
    (:use :cl))

    (in-package :test)

    (defun toplevel ()
    (print "Hello world"))

    (progn
    (toplevel)
    (ext:quit))

    And it compiles:

    ecl --eval '(progn (compile-file "test.lisp" :system-p t) (c:build-program "test" :lisp-files '"'"'("test.o")) (quit))'
    ;;; Loading #P"/home/drag0n/quicklisp/setup.lisp"
    ;;; Loading #P"/usr/local/lib/ecl-24.5.10/asdf.fas"
    ;;;
    ;;; Compiling test.lisp.
    ;;; OPTIMIZE levels: Safety=2, Space=0, Speed=3, Debug=0
    ;;;
    ;;; Finished compiling test.lisp.
    ;;;

    But doesn't print "Hello world":

    ./test

    Condition of type: UNDEFINED-FUNCTION
    The function QUICKLISP-CLIENT::QUICKLOAD is undefined.
    No restarts available.

    Top level in: #<process TOP-LEVEL 0x8295a3f80>.
    >

    #AskFedi #CommonLisp #ECL #QuickLisp

  12. CW: reinstall your linux distro in-place with this one weird trick

    the keyboard on my x86_64 tablet pc broke, so I decided to replace the arch install with postmarketOS because it has good touchscreen and FDE support (and I miss apk so badly)

    normally you'd just liveusb boot and install to a new partition

    but there's 2 issues with this

    1. there is a single USB-C port on this craplet. keyboard XOR thumbdrive, if I go the liveusb route then I can't type stuff because no external keyboard
    2. I can't make a new partition. I'm fine with nuking the arch rootfs, but I forgot to split out my /home and I don't have anywhere to back it up to, so I can't wipe the arch partition

    so I had the extremely cursed idea to (ab)use btrfs subvolumes

    the plan goes something like this:

    1. download pmOS image
    2. extract rootfs to new pmOS subvolume
    3. install kernel and initrd into EFI partition
    4. reboot
    5. realize you booted pmOS into the arch rootfs
    6. remember to set pmOS as default toplevel subvolume
    7. reboot
    8. [to be continued]

    occasional hiccup, but I'm still quite happy! touchscreen FDE decryption is working after a quick apk add unl0kr, just gotta get it booting into the right rootfs and I should have a fresh pmOS install on my hands :D

    blog post coming soonTM (maybe) (if I feel like it)


    #linux #postmarketOS #fde
  13. @arianvp Would be nice if stack traces could be constricted to include/exclude specific paths.

    - Paths within my git repo ... *very much* care about *all* of them
    - Paths within nixpkgs ... *maybe* care about 4-8 frames

    to find the error, you gotta sift through 500 lines of garbage. Makes iterating on NixOS a nightmare

    `nixos-rebuild` should collapse irrelevant internal frames by default. If you need the whole trace use `nix build ..host.config.system.build.toplevel`.

  14. Gamedev on Linux nowadays is so nice, with all the #Wayland stuff making behavior consistent and "just work"…
    
    But man, #DearImGui is such an essential tool, yet its multi-window feature is 100% unsupported on Wayland. Yesterday I had to make a svn commit to our @egosoft dev tooling that force-disables it, making modern Linux much less convenient than our other dev platforms.
    
    I hope to re-enable this at some point; could be a good excuse to learn about the protocols (`xdg-toplevel-drag`?)

  15. 🚀 Open‑source teams can now spin up multiple LLM‑backed agents with a single Docker Compose file. Define each model as a service, offload heavy inference to the cloud, and hook them into a reasoning engine—all as code. See how this simplifies agent architecture and scaling. #DockerCompose #AIModels #AgentArchitecture #InfrastructureAsCode

    🔗 aidailypost.com/news/docker-co

  16. omg it works! My #kdl #KQL engine works beautifully!

    So to summarize:

    a > b 👉🏻 any child "b" of node "a"
    a >> b 👉🏻 any descendant "b" of node "a"
    a + b 👉🏻 any "b" that immediately follows an "a" node under the same parent
    a ++ b 👉🏻 any "b" anywhere after "a" under the same parent.

    I've also got multiple parallel selectors working (with the `,` operator, just like CSS), and some magic around the toplevel `scope()` selector that lets you do things like `scope() > a` to make sure you're selecting only direct children of the *current* document/node you're querying from.

    Whew. It's been a couple of days but this was really fun! 💯 would parse again.

    Oh and it has all the nice error reporting you would expect from a tool that uses #miette 😉

    #rust #rustlang

  17. Need help from Lisp wizards — looks like I'm missing something simple and obvious (but not so obvious for beginner). I'm trying to build (with ECL) the simple program, which uses ql:quickload to load parse-number, then prints "Hello world". It builds without errors, but resulting binary could not be executed — it prints error message about unknown "ql:quickload" function.

    QuickLisp was installed like described in the official documentation. It works in SBCL, it works in ECL REPL and it has the necessary lines in the ~/.eclrc:

    ;;; The following lines added by ql:add-to-init-file:
    #-quicklisp
    (let ((quicklisp-init (merge-pathnames "quicklisp/setup.lisp"
    (user-homedir-pathname))))
    (when (probe-file quicklisp-init)
    (load quicklisp-init)))
    (ql:quickload '(:slite) :silent t)

    The program, itself, runs successfully if I just evaluate the next code in the REPL:

    (ql:quickload '(:parse-number) :silent t)

    (defpackage :test
    (:use :cl))

    (in-package :test)

    (defun toplevel ()
    (print "Hello world"))

    (progn
    (toplevel)
    (ext:quit))

    And it compiles:

    ecl --eval '(progn (compile-file "test.lisp" :system-p t) (c:build-program "test" :lisp-files '"'"'("test.o")) (quit))'
    ;;; Loading #P"/home/drag0n/quicklisp/setup.lisp"
    ;;; Loading #P"/usr/local/lib/ecl-24.5.10/asdf.fas"
    ;;;
    ;;; Compiling test.lisp.
    ;;; OPTIMIZE levels: Safety=2, Space=0, Speed=3, Debug=0
    ;;;
    ;;; Finished compiling test.lisp.
    ;;;

    But doesn't print "Hello world":

    ./test

    Condition of type: UNDEFINED-FUNCTION
    The function QUICKLISP-CLIENT::QUICKLOAD is undefined.
    No restarts available.

    Top level in: #<process TOP-LEVEL 0x8295a3f80>.
    >

    #AskFedi #CommonLisp #ECL #QuickLisp

  18. Need help from Lisp wizards — looks like I'm missing something simple and obvious (but not so obvious for beginner). I'm trying to build (with ECL) the simple program, which uses ql:quickload to load parse-number, then prints "Hello world". It builds without errors, but resulting binary could not be executed — it prints error message about unknown "ql:quickload" function.

    QuickLisp was installed like described in the official documentation. It works in SBCL, it works in ECL REPL and it has the necessary lines in the ~/.eclrc:

    ;;; The following lines added by ql:add-to-init-file:
    #-quicklisp
    (let ((quicklisp-init (merge-pathnames "quicklisp/setup.lisp"
    (user-homedir-pathname))))
    (when (probe-file quicklisp-init)
    (load quicklisp-init)))
    (ql:quickload '(:slite) :silent t)

    The program, itself, runs successfully if I just evaluate the next code in the REPL:

    (ql:quickload '(:parse-number) :silent t)

    (defpackage :test
    (:use :cl))

    (in-package :test)

    (defun toplevel ()
    (print "Hello world"))

    (progn
    (toplevel)
    (ext:quit))

    And it compiles:

    ecl --eval '(progn (compile-file "test.lisp" :system-p t) (c:build-program "test" :lisp-files '"'"'("test.o")) (quit))'
    ;;; Loading #P"/home/drag0n/quicklisp/setup.lisp"
    ;;; Loading #P"/usr/local/lib/ecl-24.5.10/asdf.fas"
    ;;;
    ;;; Compiling test.lisp.
    ;;; OPTIMIZE levels: Safety=2, Space=0, Speed=3, Debug=0
    ;;;
    ;;; Finished compiling test.lisp.
    ;;;

    But doesn't print "Hello world":

    ./test

    Condition of type: UNDEFINED-FUNCTION
    The function QUICKLISP-CLIENT::QUICKLOAD is undefined.
    No restarts available.

    Top level in: #<process TOP-LEVEL 0x8295a3f80>.
    >

    #AskFedi #CommonLisp #ECL #QuickLisp

  19. Need help from Lisp wizards — looks like I'm missing something simple and obvious (but not so obvious for beginner). I'm trying to build (with ECL) the simple program, which uses ql:quickload to load parse-number, then prints "Hello world". It builds without errors, but resulting binary could not be executed — it prints error message about unknown "ql:quickload" function.

    QuickLisp was installed like described in the official documentation. It works in SBCL, it works in ECL REPL and it has the necessary lines in the ~/.eclrc:

    ;;; The following lines added by ql:add-to-init-file:
    #-quicklisp
    (let ((quicklisp-init (merge-pathnames "quicklisp/setup.lisp"
    (user-homedir-pathname))))
    (when (probe-file quicklisp-init)
    (load quicklisp-init)))
    (ql:quickload '(:slite) :silent t)

    The program, itself, runs successfully if I just evaluate the next code in the REPL:

    (ql:quickload '(:parse-number) :silent t)

    (defpackage :test
    (:use :cl))

    (in-package :test)

    (defun toplevel ()
    (print "Hello world"))

    (progn
    (toplevel)
    (ext:quit))

    And it compiles:

    ecl --eval '(progn (compile-file "test.lisp" :system-p t) (c:build-program "test" :lisp-files '"'"'("test.o")) (quit))'
    ;;; Loading #P"/home/drag0n/quicklisp/setup.lisp"
    ;;; Loading #P"/usr/local/lib/ecl-24.5.10/asdf.fas"
    ;;;
    ;;; Compiling test.lisp.
    ;;; OPTIMIZE levels: Safety=2, Space=0, Speed=3, Debug=0
    ;;;
    ;;; Finished compiling test.lisp.
    ;;;

    But doesn't print "Hello world":

    ./test

    Condition of type: UNDEFINED-FUNCTION
    The function QUICKLISP-CLIENT::QUICKLOAD is undefined.
    No restarts available.

    Top level in: #<process TOP-LEVEL 0x8295a3f80>.
    >

    #AskFedi #CommonLisp #ECL #QuickLisp